[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1998, Book I)]
[March 4, 1998]
[Pages 326-327]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]
Remarks Supporting Legislation To Ensure the Safety of Imported Food
March 4, 1998
The President. Thank you very much for the terrific remarks. Let
me--first I want to move Senator Mikulski's box. [Laughter]
Senator Barbara A. Mikulski. I don't
want it to be a public health hazard. [Laughter]
The President. Put it on some of those little germs. [Laughter]
Thank you, Senator Mikulski,
Senator Kennedy, Congresswoman
Eshoo, Congresswoman Millender-
McDonald, and
Congressman Pallone, thank you, sir. I'd
also like to thank Secretary Shalala,
Secretary Glickman, and Ambassador
Barshefsky for the work they have done,
and the Vice President for the work he has
done on this issue over the last, now, more than 5 years.
Last night I went to New York to the celebration of Time magazine's
75th anniversary, and a number of us were asked to do portraits of
heroic figures of the 20th century. I talked last night about Franklin
Roosevelt, and we're in the Roosevelt Room here. But today I'm thinking
more of Theodore Roosevelt, for it was Theodore Roosevelt at the
beginning of this century who made an unprecedented national commitment,
for that time, to protect America's families from unsafe food.
It was at the dawn of the industrial age, when Americans were moving
from farm to city, for the first time buying their food from other
people instead of growing it themselves. Roosevelt ensured that for that
time the rules we had made our food as safe as we could make it.
President Roosevelt set a high standard nearly, now, a century ago. It
has been a personal commitment of mine and of this administration to
update that standard for the 21st century. As the world changes, new
challenges arise, it takes new methods to do the old job right.
The Vice President has told you about some things our administration
has done to modernize food safety, to keep our food supply the safest in
the world. I was literally stunned when I came here to find out that we
were inspecting meat in the United States in the same way we had
inspected it since 1910, and in the same way that dogs inspect it today,
by smelling it and touching it. We're doing a little better now.
[Laughter]
But as has been made painfully apparent today by the remarks of our
two Members of Congress and by you, ma'am,
there is still a lot we still have to do to meet the challenges to food
safety posed by new patterns of trade and commerce in food.
It wasn't long ago that you could walk to the produce section of a
grocery store, look around, and find no more than a dozen items that
would be there all year round. Today, thanks to this global food market,
it's not uncommon to find up to 400 varieties, almost all of them year
around. You can get summer squash in the chill of winter and winter
squash
[[Page 327]]
in the heat of summer now. And the farmer who grows these vegetables
most likely no longer lives down the road from you. He might live across
the ocean or on the other side of the world.
It's more important than ever under these circumstances, now that
we're getting the benefits of these new patterns, which are manifold,
it's more important than ever that the food we eat be inspected and
protected, from orchard to fruit basket, from farm to table, wherever
the orchard or the farm may be. And when families join us--and millions
and millions of Americans are joining us--as they walk through the
produce section, we know that none of them should have to worry about
where the food comes from or whether it's safe.
Food safety really is part of the basic contract now between the
consumers of our country and their Government. Any food that doesn't
meet clear and strict standards should not come into the United States.
It's that simple.
Last fall, I announced a new initiative to ensure that fruits and
vegetables coming from abroad are as safe as those grown here at home
and to halt at the border or the dock any food that fails to meet those
standards. I directed the Secretaries of Health and Human
Services and Agriculture to report on our progress in improving food safety at
home and abroad. This is their report; they've just given it to me
before we came in here. It is a good and thorough one. It underscores my
belief that while we have done a lot, more must be done, and we need the
help of Congress to do more.
The next important step to protect America's families from food-
borne illnesses requires Congress to enact the bill introduced by
Senator Mikulski, Senator
Kennedy, and others in the Senate, by
Representatives Eshoo, Pallone, and others in the House. This is not a political
issue. It's not a Democratic or a Republican issue. It is simply an
issue whose time has come. We are getting all the benefits of global
agriculture. We have to rise to the challenges of the same trends. By
giving the FDA the tools and the technology it needs, the legislation
will give Americans the extra protection they deserve.
At the beginning of the century, Theodore Roosevelt recognized that
new challenges demand new Government, in this case, a Government that
demands responsibility from industry and producers, but also provides
clearer, stricter standards of safety and the means to enforce them. Our
families enjoy the greatest bounty and variety of food in the world. We
have to ensure that it will also be the safest food in the world.
The 21st century will be interesting for many reasons. Among them
will be the increasing variety of food from all over the world that all
kinds of Americans will be able to buy in their neighborhood stores. It
will be one more way that people, I hope, will have a more enjoyable
life in the next century. It will only happen if the food is safe and
people know it's safe, so they're not worried when they shop.
Again, I want to join the Vice President, if I might in closing, in thanking the Senate for passing
the bill yesterday to reduce the standard of drunk driving to .08. I
think it's very important, it will save hundreds of lives a year. I hope
the House will follow suit, and I hope that's an indication that these
kind of public safety issues will be high on the agenda of Congress and
that the bill that our Members who are here today are pushing so hard
will find a speedy and positive reception in the Congress.
Thank you very much.
Note: The President spoke at 2:03 p.m. in the Roosevelt Room at the
White House. In his remarks, he referred to Gloria Doyle, a victim of
acute cyclospora food poisoning attributed to imported fruit in May
1997, who introduced the President.